Alan Biley: Farewell to player’s player Doyle from a great Portsmouth team

Alan Biley has paid tribute to a ‘player’s player’ after Fratton Park bid farewell to another favourite son.

Midfielder Bobby Doyle passed away on Tuesday at the age of 65.

The Scot made 188 appearances, scoring 18 times, and memorably was a mainstay of the side which clinched the Division Three title in 1982-83.

The loss of Doyle is felt during a period when the Blues are still mourning the death of another powerful midfield performer in Mick Kennedy.

The flamboyant Biley played alongside both during a south-coast career which ultimately would earn induction into the Pompey Hall of Fame.

And the free-scoring striker remembers Doyle as the granite-chiselled central midfielder who started 44 of the Blues’ 46 matches during that successful campaign under Bobby Campbell.

Biley said: ‘Bobby was very underestimated.

‘He had probably one of the best engines I’d ever known, he could go all day, and was like granite as well. When you think we had him alongside Mick Tait at times it was quite awesome.

‘He was a silent assassin, not a person you would hear shouting a lot, whereas Micky Kennedy was more in your face.

‘But it discredits Bobby to call him a kicker, he was very strong at tackling, could stop things from happening, but had the wherewithal to start things again. I remember vividly him taking the ball and running 30-40 yards with it because he had great legs and lungs.

‘He was a very underestimated player, not somebody at the time greatly talked about, he just went about his business, one of those players you all need in the side and a player's player.

‘I used to say the same about Billy Rafferty. There was a lot more to Billy’s game than many people saw, but the biggest thing for me was he was a player’s player – and that’s what Bobby Doyle was.

‘That is the biggest accolade I can say about him. We were all pleased when we saw him on the teamsheet because he actually did an important job for us.